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Anaheim's top 4 men's clothing spots - Hoodline

Anaheim's top 4 men's clothing spots - Hoodline


Anaheim's top 4 men's clothing spots - Hoodline

Posted: 03 Apr 2020 01:14 PM PDT

Shopping for men's clothing?

Hoodline crunched the numbers to find the top spots selling such garb around Anaheim, using both Yelp data and our own secret sauce to produce a ranked list of the best spots to venture next time you're in the market for men's clothing.

Spring is the top season of the year for consumer spending at retail and wholesale businesses across the Anaheim area, according to data on local business transactions from Womply, a software provider that helps small businesses get more customer feedback. Daily spending at Anaheim-area retail and wholesale businesses grew to $2,043,054 for the metro area in the spring of last year, 5% higher than the average for the rest of the year.

Hoodline offers data-driven analysis of local happenings and trends across cities. Links included in this article may earn Hoodline a commission on clicks and transactions.


1. Friar Tux

photo: friar tux/yelp

First on the list is Friar Tux. Located at 1711 S. Claudina Way in the Platinum Triangle, the formal wear spot is also the highest-rated men's clothier in Anaheim, boasting 4.5 stars out of 96 reviews on Yelp.

2. Basic Clothing and Uniform

photo: basic clothing and uniform/yelp

Next up is Southeast Anaheim's Basic Clothing and Uniform, at 528 S. State College Blvd., Suite 101. With 4.5 stars out of 16 reviews on Yelp, the men's and women's clothing spot, offering uniforms and more, has proved to be a local favorite.

3. Factory Xtreme

photo: mark c./yelp

Anaheim Resort's Factory Xtreme, at 400 W. Disney Way, Suite 152, is another top choice. Yelpers give the toy store, gift shop and men's clothing spot 4.5 stars out of 18 reviews.

4. Value Maxx

Photo: value maxx/Yelp

Last but not least is Value Maxx, a men's and women's clothing and screen printing/T-shirt printing spot also in Anaheim Resort. It's another go-to, with four stars out of 12 Yelp reviews. Head over to 2316 S. Harbor Blvd. to see for yourself.


This story was created automatically using local business data, then reviewed and augmented by an editor. Click here for more about what we're doing. Got thoughts? Go here to share your feedback.

Edward Salim Yarid | Obituaries - Charleston Gazette-Mail

Posted: 31 Mar 2020 12:00 AM PDT

EDWARD SALIM YARID, 97, of Lewisburg, passed away peacefully at the Peyton Hospice House on March 31, 2020.

He was born in Lewisburg, on Friday the 13th in December 1922 and, except for college, lived his entire life there. He was a devoted husband and a wonderful father and grandfather.

He attended high school at Greenbrier Military School in Lewisburg and, after graduation, joined the Army where he trained in Hawaii during World War II.

After the war, he took advantage of the G.I. bill and graduated from West Virginia University, where he joined the Kappa Alpha Order. He then went to New York University for a Master's in business. He came back to Lewisburg to work with his mother and father at Yarid's Clothing Store.

In 1957, while on a trip to Miami, he met his soon to be wife, Joan Battah. After a long distance romance through the U.S. Postal System, they married in 1958 and he brought her back to Lewisburg. They had four children and settled into their life of family and retail.

Yarid's Department Store was a very important part of Eddie's life. He and his mother, Dora, were buyers for the ladies clothing, and his brother, Munir, was buyer for the men's clothing. They would travel to New York numerous times per year to bring back the latest fashions to the ladies of West Virginia.

Eddie loved Lewisburg and was a major contributor to the revitalization of the town. Eddie and Munir were one of the founding members of "Taste of Our Town" (TOOT) which became an instrumental fundraiser for Carnegie Hall.

He was also a member of the Greenbrier County Board of Education, a member of the Board of Directors for Davis and Elkins, an Elder and Deacon at Old Stone Presbyterian Church, and was awarded a Lifelong Member of the Lewisburg Rotary Club. In 2015, when the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine christened the Greenbrier Military School Museum, Eddie was celebrated as the oldest living member of GMS.

He loved WVU football and basketball and would proudly wear his WVU baseball cap during all his travels. On several occasions he would make new friends, as his baseball cap was a catalyst for conversations about his beloved West Virginia.

He held a special place in his heart for his caregivers, Angela Radford, Libby Kincaid, Sandy Alderman, and Beth Humphries. He also was extremely fond of his girls in the Yarid's Lewisburg location. After Eddie retired, he would visit them daily, take them the mail, and give them advice on the business.

Eddie was preceded in death by his parents, Samuel and Dora Yarid; his brother Munir; and his son, David.

Survivors include his wife of 62 years, Joan, and his three daughters, Dora OBrien (John), Katherine Juker (Tony), and Emilie Couch (Chris); his seven grandchildren, Jessica and Sean OBrien, Anthony and Sophia Juker, and Sam, Alex, and Rachel Couch; and his sister-in-law, Yvette.

There will be a memorial service when we are able to celebrate his life with all the glory he deserved and with all of the people he loved. We ask that everyone who has a special story about Eddie or their favorite memories of Yarid's to please share at info.yarids@gmail.com.

In lieu of flowers, please send donations to The David Yarid Scholarship Fund, c/o The Greenbrier County Schools Foundation, 400 N. Lee Street, Lewisburg, WV 24901; The Old Stone Presbyterian Church; or Peyton Hospice House in Lewisburg.

 Wallace & Wallace Funeral Home in Lewisburg, W.Va., is in charge of arrangements.

Please send online condolences by visiting www.WallaceandWallaceFH.com.

Archer, Eleanora - 11 a.m., Floral Hills Garden of Memories, Sissonville.

Haggerty, Juanita - Noon, Montgomery Memorial Park, London.

Johnson, Harlan - 2 p.m., Blakeley Cemetery, Pond Gap.

Lane, Pauline - 2 p.m., Danville Memorial Park, Danville.

Miller, Jonathan - 11 a.m., Dequasie Cemetery, Lockbridge.

Painter, William - 1 p.m., Valley View Memorial Park, Hurricane.

Shamblin, Joan - 1 p.m., Haven of Rest Memory Gardens, Red House.

The 39 Best Online Clothing Stores for Menswear in 2020 - GQ

Posted: 09 Mar 2020 06:48 AM PDT

In 2020, you can't talk shopping without talking e-comm, and the best online shopping sites for men (or anyone shopping for menswear) are better than ever, full of rare gear and tried-and-true standards alike. (Free shipping doesn't hurt, either.) But shopping online isn't a one-size-fits-all activity; every great e-comm site is different in its own way. So we've collected the 39 best online shops for menswear, the ones we consider the most essential, and explained what makes each distinct. These are the sites we return to time and again to restock our closets—and, occasionally, to take advantage of liberal return policies.


Mr. Porter has been around only since 2011, but it's shot to the top of the menswear shopping rankings for obvious reasons: a blue-chip roster of labels, exclusive collections and collaborations, an in-house brand that punches above its weight, and unparalleled ease of use. (And in NYC or the tri-state area, Mr. P can do same-day delivery if you really need that Gucci jacket.) This where just about all of your digital shopping sojourns should start, whether you're buying a Tom Ford tux or a couple ties from Drake's.


The Vision Board: SSENSE

The Montreal upstart has impressively deep stocks of hard-to-find-elsewhere gear from high-fashion brands like Rick Owens and Marine Serre, but we love the way SSENSE shows the clothes. Where online shops tend to be dutiful—or worse—in their styling, SSENSE's on-model looks make you think: I can definitely pull this off.

Rick Owens boots

SSENSE will convince you that these Rick Owens "Megatooth" boots were designed just for you.

SSENSE

$2,080

Buy Now

The High-Fashion Scandinavian Skate Shop: Très Bien

Before e-comm kicked into high gear, you had to travel far and wide to find the best graphic tees in the world. Now you can score a ton of them—from the mad print geniuses at Our Legacy, the fashion-minded skaters behind Polar, and everyone in between—on this Swedish shop's site.

Our Legacy t-shirt

The Our Legacy guys are Swedish but won't ever be mistaken for Scandinavian minimalists.

Très Bien

$240

Buy Now

There might not be a shop on the whole internet with a bigger selection than the U.K. store End Clothing. But we especially love its athletic-leaning gear, whether low (Champion) or high (Stone Island).


If you're the type of fashion fan who clicks through slideshows of the latest Prada, Givenchy, and Alyx runway shows looking for style inspo, Moda Operandi is an easy bookmark: It's killer app is being one of the only online shops where you can order your favorite pieces in advance, right off the catwalk.

Marni printed shirt

The fashion crowd lost it for Marni's spring '20 prints. Moda's model guarantees you a shot at them.

Moda Operandi

$570

Buy Now

The Freakflag Fliers: Totokaelo

Totokaelo is where out-there downtown fashion goes to grow up. It's beloved by gallerists, creative directors, and energy healers looking for asymmetric fits and split-toe boots from a globe-trotting designer roster (Lanvin, Needles). Dig around the "Art-Objet" section if you're in the market for a bougie gift, fancy deodorant, or beautiful ceramics by Shino Takeda.


Great for personal copping, but best for gift-giving. That's because Richmond's Need Supply Co. has fun for the whole family: Dries Van Noten for you, Carhartt WIP for your fashion-curious younger brother, home goods sharp enough to impress your spouse.

Converse Marble Chuck sneaker

Tired: Chuck Taylors. Wired: marble-print tie-dye Chuck Taylors.

Need Supply

$100

Buy Now

The Stalwart: Union

Union owner Chris Gibbs is special among e-commerce kings in being able to communicate his specific taste—think oversize Raf Simons sweaters and cutoff Dickies, with a gone-before-it-dropped Jordan collab—through his cavernous digital warehouse.


The Map Shrinker: Haven

The world is flat: If you're looking for asymmetrical, Japanese-inflected goods, hit the web shop for Haven, whose brick-and-mortar shop sits in the fashion hotbed of Alberta, Canada.


Farfetch is busy building the future of fashion. It stocks its own goods, serves as a web storefront for over 500 other stores, and bought Stadium Goods to turn itself into a sneaker-resale powerhouse. In other words: If it's not on Farfetch, it probably doesn't exist.


A lot of top-end menswear boutiques are purposefully intimidating. Lost & Found is the total opposite: cheery, welcoming, unmistakably Canadian. (Actual tagline: "Let's Be Pals!") Season after season, they deliver killer selections from brands you know (Engineered Garments) and ones you don't (Randy's Garments), all presented in as accessible and downright charming a manner as possible.


The Small Batch Specialists: Four Horsemen

This Victoria, B.C. shop stocks cool-kid labels like Brain Dead, Our Legacy, and Aries, but the real draw is its eponymous in-house label. It's all made locally in hyper-limited runs, which lets them take big swings on aggressively pleated cord cargos, magenta mid-00s-era soccer kits, and fuzzy floral cardigans.

Four Horsemen Cord Cargo Jacket

The work jacket of the future—or, heck, of just right now—comes from Canada.

Four Horsemen

$300

Buy Now

The Vintage Repository: Etsy

Filter out all the misshapen ceramics and DIY crochet cushions, and you're left with a plethora of vintage gems that's better curated than eBay and weirder than Grailed.


If you've ever meandered through one of the physical Dover Street Markets scattered across the globe, the online version of Rei Kawakubo's mini retail empire will feel mighty familiar: a little scattershot and mildly confusing, but brimming with an oddball mix of the most beautiful and rare clothes on the planet.

Sky High Farms Mind Body and Soul T-Shirt

DSM's web shop replicates the real thing's T-Shirt Space, which means you don't have to go to Tokyo (or New York, or London, or LA) to grab this piece of merch, celebrating artist Dan Colen's new life as a farmer.

Dover Street Market

$65

Buy Now

The Sneaker Plug: StockX

StockX turned the resale game on its head by asking sneakerheads to treat their kicks like stocks, and it's still the best place to go if you have some freshly-dropped heat to offload and are looking to make a quick buck. But it's also a great spot to post up for a few hours to uncover all sorts of wild deals on undervalued shoes, streetwear, and even furniture.


In streetwear vet Avi Gold's world, advanced garms from Cav Empt bump up against bootleg Larry David tees, underground art books, classic Barbarian rugby shirts, vintage motorcycle helmet ashtrays, and enough Japanese incense to cloud up every dorm room in America. It all somehow works, mostly because it's all stuff you didn't know you desperately needed.


The Classic Footwear Depot: Zappos

Free shipping both ways. Reams of classic shoe brands. Saved and searchable order history going all the way back to your first pair of desert boots some thirteen-odd years ago (just in case you temporarily forgot your size in Clarks). But the real coup de grace: quick-loading QVC-style employee-led shoe spotlight videos on a white-seamless, so you can scope the super subtle stitching differences between the Dr. Martens 1461 "Gibson" and the 1461 Work "SR".


The Ultimate e-Indie Experience: Goodhood

Goodhood is one of those stores on everyone's "must-go" lists for London—the stock is brilliantly merchandised in a zen space with worn wooden floors and hip sales associates in sick outfits. It can be hard for places that provide that level of "you gotta be there" experience to deliver online, but Goodhood has figured it out. Their website is like a gorgeous lifestyle blog, with products and brands grouped together in storylines ("Future Classics," "Soft Furnishings"), so you avoid the endless mind-numbing scroll that online shopping induces and get that feeling of discovery that great indie boutiques offer.


The Global-but-Local Zine Shop: Ooga Booga

The whole point of shopping in another city is to find a place like Ooga Booga, filled with joyful discoveries like mixtapes by K Records founder Calvin Johnson, and a zine about beautiful mushrooms, and a scribbly scarf with a print by artist Emma Kohlmann. Their Los Angeles brick-and-mortar store closed last year, but Ooga Booga still maintains the wacky mix online. It's the perfect place to buy a gift or fill your apartment with art on a budget.


You could write an article just on the Vermont Country Store—and indeed, someone has—but The Vermont Country Store is a fully formed universe of Americana, from the best flannel sheets to the perfect house shoe to like, the kind of potions a cigar-smoking, suspender-clad town doctor would recommend for inflammation. (There's literally a whole section called "Remedies.") Forgo Ikea, and stock your kitchen (economically!) with Cavendish Stoneware and carpet your floors with a taupe oval braided rug! The "Brands From the Past" mini-store is not to be missed.

Vermont Country Store Men's Leather Scuffs

Straight from Vermont, shoes that'll make you never go barefoot at home again.

Vermont Country Store

$55

Buy Now

The Direct-from-Japan: Coverchord

Coverchord is the very rare multi-brand Japanese ecomm spot that ships directly to the US—all for a very reasonable fee. The robust brand selection includes many you won't find outside of Japan: tees and knits by Graphpaper, bags and accessories from Hobo, hats by Kijima Takayuki, and loads more.


The Fashion Friend: Neighbour

This Vancouver-based shop makes heady cult brands like Frank Leder, Camiel Fortgens, Casey Casey and Stephan Schneider look and feel super accessible and easy to wear.


Stylists love this LA shop because of its unflinching commitment to elite and avant-garde designers, from Loewe and Marni to Martine Rose and Yang Li. And their buyers favor runway pieces over the more commercial stuff, so the selection is all killer, no filler.


The Cerebral Selector: Tiina

This sleepy spot in Amagansett is a low-key haven for ultra-discerning Hamptonites, and the webshop offers a rare peek into their world. It's mostly women's, so it's worth browsing for fitspo if not to actually cop.


It's hard to get a sense of how a garment feels on the internet. But somehow, everything stocked by No Man Walks Alone, a mostly-online (there's a small New York shop if you're curious) depot for traditional-with-a-tweak menswear, just looks touchable. Corduroy and wool and tweed, all of it from craft-forward designers like Frank Leder and Tie Your Tie: this is web shopping as tactile experience.


I didn't know Houston had much in the way of menswear, to say nothing of the painstakingly assembled collection at Namu Shop. They don't sell a ton—I count maybe a dozen brands—but it'll all help you dress more like the loose-and-boxy, I-dabble-in-graphic-design-and-also-fragrance look I find myself after a few months a year.

Hatski loose tapered jeans

Jeans to live in, courtesy of the coolest shop in Houston.

Namu Shop

$305

Buy Now

The Place to Shop While Enjoying a Spot of Tea: Oi Polloi

The charmingly British and lo-fi Oi Polloi sells the exact contents of my dream closet. The cheeky rainbow-colored selection of practical footwear from the likes of Birkenstock, Merrell and Clarks next to heavy sweaters. Even in our streetwear-infatuated times, Oi Polloi has kept an ironclad grip on classic, regular-dude wares from APC, Polo Ralph Lauren, and Beams Plus.


The Online Warehouse: eBay

The most successful vintage dealers will credit their success to patience: the willingness to hunt down clothes or rifle through stacks and stacks of the worthless stuff until they find a grail. eBay is a lot like that, except you're just sitting at a computer for hours, trying to solve the riddle of search terms that will lead you past the rejects to your one-and-only jawn. But you're reminded why eBay is still a vital shopping option when the thing you're looking for finally materializes on page 23.


A Prime Shopping Destination: Amazon

Like its newly swole founder, Amazon has evolved into a place where good clothes actually happen. You're not going to find anything special or experience the feeling of discovery that boutiques wow you with, but the standard-issue stuff is all there. If you want Levi's jeans, Dickies pants, or Adidas shoes delivered in two days, there is really no other option.


The Sadderday Cure: GOAT

Ever miss out on a pair of super-hyped sneakers and think, "I really wish I could pay 10 times retail for them?" Boy, do I have an app for you. Joking aside, in our new reality—the one where limited sneakers cost a fortune on the secondary market—if you are desperate for the latest and greatest, Goat is a reliable and easy-to-use option.


The Hypebeast Mecca: Grailed

Just think: a few short years ago, it was impossible to overpay a rude teen for a box-logo hoodie. We were so young! (Advanced user note: old-school #menswear gear—soft-shouldered blazers, loafers, the whole deal—is criminally affordable.)


The Rich Uncle's Closet: The Real Real

The Real Real will tell you that it does a bustling business in watches and streetwear and hyped-up sneakers. I will tell you that it's the very best place to buy a cashmere sweater, because the wealthy folks who love having the Real Real empty out their closets for sale really love cashmere.


You can always count on the fashion enthusiasts at London's MATCHESFASHION to buy interesting selections from the likes of Prada and JW Anderson. But they also make a point to support young, exciting designers like Ludovic de Saint Sernin and Bianca Saunders early in their careers, when they can most benefit from access to a sleek e-comm operation with fast, global shipping.


You'll want to stop by their Greene St. space to check out the wall-to-wall selection of kevlar-thick raw Japanese denim jeans, but there's no better stateside spot to browse cult-favorite Japanese brands like Kapital, Mountain Research, and N. Hoolywood than Blue In Green's site.

Kapital Boa Fleece GAME Vest

The whole point of shopping is to learn that a "fleece game vest" is a thing that exists.

Blue In Green

$372

Buy Now

The Savoir: LN-CC

I'm not sure what it is about LN-CC, but the London e-comm outfit has bailed us out time and time again when the need-it Eckhaus Latta sweater or Alyx loafers or Camiel Fortgens shirt has been sold out everywhere else. Now it's one of the first places we look for elusive jawnz.


The Runway Warehouse: Antonioli

Milan-based Antonioli might be the best place to buy clothing straight off the Paris Fashion Week runways. The selections of Raf Simons, Vetements, Rick Owens, and Undercover are extensive and advanced, and the end-of-season sales are legendary.


An excellent tab to open for low-cost basics—tees, sweatshirts, hats, beanies—from Carhartt and other outdoor brands, especially when there's a sale. Load up on Real Tree camo here, or even some highlighter neon so that you don't get mistaken for a deer.

Bass Pro Shops Camo Mesh Safety Cap

Don't laugh—this is a great hat.

Bass Pro Shop

$15

Buy Now

The Overseas Vintage Shop: Rakuten Japan

There are a fair amount of great Japan-based secondhand stores on Rakuten, which opens up a whole new shopping world if you're in the market for, say, beat-up Undercover graphic tees, trousers from Beams, or maybe even a suit from Ring Jacket. Sizing can get a little tricky, so do a little bit of research before pulling the trigger, since you likely won't be able to return anything.


A version of this story originally appeared in the March 2020 issue with the title "The 10 Most Essential Menswear E-Comm Sites in 2020."

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